F.N. Souza (born April 12, 1924, Saligoa, Portuguese Goa [now Goa state, India]—died March 28, 2002, Mumbai, India) was one of India’s best-known contemporary painters whose style was not easily characterized, though it was decidedly modern in outlook. His subjects ranged from still lifes, landscapes, and nudes to Christian themes such as the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Souza’s paintings rejected convention and the banality of everyday life, and many of them explored erotic subjects.
Souza joined the Sir J.J. School of Art, in Bombay (now Mumbai), to study art, but he was soon expelled for his participation in the anti-British Quit India movement. He joined the Communist Party of India and, with such artists as Sayed Haider Raza and M.F. Husain, cofounded the Progressive Artists Group. In 1949 he left India to live in London, where, while struggling to make an impact as an artist, he eked out a living as a journalist. He also wrote an autobiography, Words & Lines (1959). In 1967 Souza received the Guggenheim International Award, then the highest monetary award given in the arts, and moved to New York, where he lived until shortly before his death.